Whewell’s Gazette
Your weekly digest of all the best of
Internet history of science, technology and medicine
Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell
Year 2, Volume #33
Monday 29 February 2016
EDITORIAL:
The year rolls on and we roll with it. It’s time once again for your weekly #histSTM links list Whewell’s Gazette bringing you all the histories of science, medicine and technology that we could scoop up in the far reaches of cyberspace over the last seven days.
Over the weekend there was a minor flurry in the Internet #histSTM and #scicomm communities cause by an opinion piece from the new President of the Royal Society, Vanki Ramakrishnan on The Guardian Website with the seemingly harmless title More than ever, science must be central to our lives. Like many of my Internet friends I felt my self thrown back in time to C. P. Snow’s legendary Two Cultures lecture from 1959, in which the chemist and novelist Charles Snow complained about the gulf between the arts and the sciences as he saw it and the fact that it was socially acceptable to admit ignorance of the science, but not of the (highbrow) arts.
Ramakrishnan’s Guardian piece reads like a cheap copy of Snow’s legendary Reith Lecture and was made all the worse by his extraordinary claim that the arts are privileged today in our society vis-à-vis the sciences. A claim that appears to be more than ridiculous in a time when politicians throughout the so-called developed world are calling the existence of humanities departments in universities into question whilst promoting spending on the sciences.
#histSTM is of course the seam where the humanities and the sciences meet and I am not alone in thinking that it is ridiculous for anybody involved in research or education to try and drive a wedge between them, as Ramakrishnan appears to be doing in his opinion piece. A cultured society needs all of the academic disciplines, which should compliment and not rival each other and I find it depressing when somebody in as influential a position as Ramakrishnan tries to pit the sciences and the humanities against each other. Whewell’s Gazette is a symbol of the unity that can and should exist between them and we hope that all our readers will continue to fight to support that unity.
Quotes of the week:
“Wait. If autism-spectrum people are over-represented in the sciences… wouldn’t that imply that… autism causes vaccines?!” – Zach Wienersmith (@ZachWeiner)
“The different branches of Arithmetic – Ambition, Distraction, Uglification, and Derision.” – Lewis Carroll
“Some details are enormously important.
Some are absolutely worthless.
“Attention to detail” means nothing without context”. – John D Cook (@JohnDCook)
“Jan 1790, Thomas Mann lodges a patent for “a certain instrument for assisting the human body in walking (and which I call an artificial leg)” – Alun Withey (@DrAlun)
“All human thought, all science, all religion, is the holding of a candle to the night of the universe.” – Clark Ashton Smith h/t @cratylus
“Seems to me that kids get taught plenty about writing but not so much about storytelling, which is really its own distinct discipline” – Adrian Bott (@Cavalorn)
Birthday of the Week:
Camille Flammerion born 26 February 18
Today in Science History: Flammarion The Astronomer
Shareok: Boldly Explore: Camille Flammarion (1888)

Flammarion engraving, Paris 1888, for Flammarion’s 1888 L’atmosphère : météorologie populaire (p. 163)
Source: Wikimedia Commons
PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:
Geographicus: 1801 Bode Celestial Hemispheres or Star Maps
American Astronomical Society: James B. Pollock (1938 – 1994)
AHF: Fritz Strassmann
The Public Domain Review: Self-Portrait by Ernst Mach (1886)
Yovisto: Carl Friedrich Gauss – The Prince of Mathematicians
Yovisto: The Sky Disc of Nebra
Time: How to Watch the Solar Eclipse Like a 1960s School Kid

Caption from LIFE. Fifth-graders at the Emerson School in Maywood, Ill. line up with backs to the sun and their eclipse-watching boxes over their heads.
Francis Miller—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images
Voices of the Manhattan Project: General Paul Tibbets – Reflections on Hiroshima
The Sphere of Sacrobosco: The First (Printed) Portuguese Sphere
irf.se: Viking – Sweden’s first satellite
Astrolabes and Stuff: Medieval (g)astronomy: my PhD in biscuit form
The Renaissance Mathematicus: Christoph and the Calendar
The Atlantic: A Murder at the American Physical Society
Voices of the Manhattan Project: General Kenneth Nichols’ Interview
Royal Society: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: About the Cover
UCL: STS Observatory: Britain’s Oppenheimer?
Atlas Obscura: Dwingeloo Radio Observatory
AHF: James Chadwick
Anna Belfrage: No nose & a burst bladder – poor man!
Ladd Observatory Blog: An Astronomical Blunder
EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:
Cartographia: Archive for the ‘Charles Joseph Minard’ Category: Mondays with Minard: Cotton and Wool Comparisons
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Little-known African-American among Peary’s North Pole explorers

In this May 14, 1926, photo, Matthew Henson, in New York, points to a map of the North Pole. He was part of the expedition of Robert Peary to the Pole.
Associated Press
Slate: The Vault: A Colorful Late-19th-Century Map of Native American Languages
Yovisto: Amerigo Vespucci and the New World
The Renaissance Mathematicus: The naming of America
Atlas Obscura: Can You Spot The Monsters in This Medieval Map of The World
New York Public Library: Open Access Maps at NYPL
Brilliant Maps: An Incredibly Detailed Map of the Roman Empire At Its Height in 211 AD
British Library: Maps and views blog: ‘Whither the Fates Carry Us’: Bermuda goes Off the Map
National Library of Scotland: Scotland – Land Use ViewerBnF: Gallica: 55 Digitised 3D Globes
Hyperallergic: A Map Library Is Digitizing Its Rarest Globes as 3D Models
The Australian: Finally, history at all our fingertips at National Library
BBC News: What books were taken to the Antarctic 100 years ago?
The National: The Great polish Map of Scotland is shown in great detail by drone image
Tabletop Whale: Here there be robots: A medieval map of Mars
MEDICINE & HEALTH:
Thomas Morris: Leeches for everybody
Penn Libraries Manuscripts: A 15c Italian Herbal with Male & Female Mandrake Plants
NYAM: A Medical Symphony: Celebrating African Americans in New York Medicine
Georgian Gentleman: A method of preventing a Miscarriage, given by Mrs Stringer
Nursing Clio: “She Did It to Herself”: Women’s Health on Television and Film
Thomas Morris: The man with a tooth in his ear
NCBI: Early victims of X-rays: a tribute and current perception
The Public Domain Review: Frederik Ruysch: The Artist of Death

Detail from Jan van Neck’s Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Frederick Ruysch (1683), showing Ruysch in the centre with an infant cadaver
Source: Wikimedia Commons
The Andover Townsman: Illuminating the darkness
Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow: The College Library: William Macewen, Glasgow Police Surgeon
Circulating Now: Pubmed Central: Visualizing a Historical Treasure Trove
University of Queensland: UQ News: Ancient medicines and bone lever in rare Roman medical kit
Medicine, ancient and modern: Blog Facelift!
The H-Word: How to spot a doctor before the invention of the stethoscope
Nursing Clio: Flowers and Lady Charlotte: Talking about Menstruation, Past and Present
O Can You See?: Kids pitched in to defeat disease and advance medical research
The Chirurgeon’s Apprentice: The Battle over Bodies: A History of Criminal Dissection
The Huntingdon: Major History of Medicine Collection Comes to the Huntingdon
Yovisto: Giovanni Battista Morgagni and the Science of Anatomy
Yovisto: The Flaked Cereal turns 128 – thanks to John H. Kellogg
Thomas Morris: Mütter’s operation – plastic surgery 19th-century style
Royal Museums Greenwich: The Great Plague of London in numbers
TECHNOLOGY:
Conciatore: Reticello
Conciatore: Glass or Rock
Literacy of the Present: Nothing Left to Invent: Victorian visions of the future
Two Nerdy History Girls: Fashionable Technology, c.1740
New Scientist: Old Scientist: Do you really want this computer?
Ptak Science Books: An Escher-Like Non-Escher Architectural Image
Mental–floss: The Electrifying Rivalry of History’s Greatest Frenemies
Yovisto: Jacques de Vaucanson and his Miraculous Automata
The Atlantic: Hearing the Lost Sounds of Antiquity
Daily Kos: The Baghdad Battery: An Update
The Recipes Project: Making ‘Powder for Hourglasses’ in the Early Modern Household
Shropshire Star: £1.25 million renovation for Shropshire’s Iron Bridge
National Railway Museum: Pulling Flying Scotsman off the Drawing Board
Royal Museums Greenwich: St. Michael – identifying the mysterious ship from 1669
Yovisto: Thomas Newcomen and the Steam Engine
Yovisto: Robert Alexander Watson-Watt and the Radar Technology
Upworthy: These 6 women got written out of tech history. They’re finally being recognised
The New York Times: Wesley A: Clark, Made Computing Personal, Dies at 88
Ptak Science Books: History of the Future of Massiveness: Stadium-Seating Skyscrapers, NYC, 1938 Imaginary New York City Landscapes from CON-ED, 1938
EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:
jamesungureanu: Visions of Science: Charles Lyell
evolution-institute.org: Was Hitler a Darwinian? No! No! No!
National Graphic: The Plate: Like Sushi? Thank a Female Phycologist for Saving Seaweed
National Geographic: ‘Shark Lady’ Eugenie Clark, Famed Marine Biologist, Has Died
Yovisto: Andrea Cesalpino and the Classification of Plants
Mental_floss: The King of Scotland’s Peculiar Language Experiment
Notches: Catholicism, Contraception, and The History of Sexuality
The Guardian: Lost Worlds Revisited – an introduction to our new palaeontology blog
BHL: We Need Books to…Identify New Species
The Public Domain Review: Extracts from the Endeavour Journal of Joseph Banks (1769)
JHI Blog: Aldo Leopold and the History of Environmental Ideas
Smithsonian.com: How the Gold Rush Led to Real Riches in Bird Poop

A 19th-century illustration depicts a scene off the coast of Peru, where bird poop, or guano, was harvested as a valuable agricultural fertilizer. (Corbis)
Notches: Gay Politics and Police Politics in the American City
Hindustan Times: Not so dumb: Dodos may have been fairly smart, says study
The Thrifty Traveller: In Search of Wallace – Gading & Ayer Panas
Earth and Planetary Science: Clyde Wahrhaftig (1919–1994)
Seismo Blog: Deep Earthquakes and The King
Understanding Society: History of sociology
CHEMISTRY:
about education: Who is the Father of Chemistry?
about education: Aqua Regis Definition
Royal Society: Glenn Theodore Seaborg 19 April 1912– 25 February 1999
AHF: Plutonium
AHF: Glen Seaborg
Compound Interest: A Periodic Table of Rejected Element Names
Othmeralia: Georg Washington Carver
CHF: Dangerous Materials?
META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:
Harvard Magazine: The Science of History
The Recipes Project: A Recipe for Recipe Research: The Making and Knowing Project
People’s History of the NHS: People’s History of the NHS Introduction
psych.yoku.ca: Partial Bibliography of the History of Black Women Psychologists
The Nation: Ibn Rushd vs Ghazali: Did the Muslim world take a wrong turn?
Niche: #EnvHist Daily
Ambitious about Autism: Guide to an Autism Friendly Museum
HNN: Elizabeth Eisenstein, Trailblazing Historian of Movable Type, Dies at 92
The New York Times: Elizabeth Eisenstein, Trailblazing Historian of Movable Type, Dies at 92
Science Gossip: A Year of Science Gossip
Slate The Vault: Timeline Lets You Browse Hundreds of Historical Documents From The Vaults Blog
Cultures of Knowledge: Giovanni Antonio Magini and the dawn of EMLO’s thematic clusters
Global Dialogue: The Strange History of Sociology and Anthropology
Lady Science: Pitch an article for Lady Science
ESOTERIC:
The Casebook Project: Introduction to the edition of The Astrologicalle Judgmentes of phisick and other Questions
The Casebook Project: The Astrologicalle Judgmentes of phisick and other Questions: witnesses and dating
Heterodoxology: The scholastic imagination
Wellcome Collection Blog: The Hand and the Eye: the story of an amulet
distillatio: The part medieval alchemy played in the scientific revolution
Conciatore: Friar Mauritio
PIT Journal: Lead to Gold, Sorcery to Science: Alchemy and the Foundations of Modern Chemistry
BOOK REVIEWS:
Science Book a Day: The Mysterious Universe
npr: ‘Pandemic’ Asks: Is A Disease That Will Kill Tens of Million Coming?
Backlist: Histories of the Scientific Revolution by Deborah Harkness
Advances in the History of Psychology: New Books Network: Interview Round Up
Nature: History of Science: When eugenics became law
Deseret News: The Mapmakers of New Zion tells the story of Mormonism through maps
NEW BOOKS:
Historiens de la santé: The World of Plants in Renaissance Tuscany: Medicine and Botany
Historiens de la santé: The Anatomy of Murder: Ethical Transgressions and Anatomical Science During the Third Reich
Historiens de la santé: Therapoetics after Actium: Narrative, Medicine, and Authority in Augustan Epic
Historiens de la santé: Spannungsherde. Psychochirurgie nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg
Wellcome Witnesses to Contemporary Medicine: Air Pollution Research in Britain c.1955–2000 Free Download
Historiens de la santé: Nurse Writers of the Great War
G.T. Labs: The Imitation Game: Alan Turing Decoded
Harvard University Press: Bone Rooms: From Scientific Racism to Human Prehistory in Museums
Historiens de la santé: Suicide in Twentieth-Century Japan
OUP: Essays in the Philosophy of Chemistry
Historiens de la santé: La folle clinique sexuelle du Professeur Pxxx, de la Belle époque aux Années folles
ART & EXHIBITIONS
Londonist: 5 Excellent Reasons to Catch the Pepys Show at Greenwich
issuu.com: Pepys Show
Royal Society of Chemistry: Our 175 faces of chemistry exhibition
Royal College of Physicians: Scholar courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee 18 January29–July 2016
Griseda Heppel: The lost library of Dr Dee
New Scientist: The maddeningly magical maths of John Dee
University of Delaware: UDaily: Alchemy and Mineralogy 26 February–31 March 2016
The National Air and Space Museum: A New Moon Rises: An Exhibition Where Science and Art Meet
Bodleian Library & Radcliffe Camera: Bodleian Treasures: 24 Pairs 25 February2016–19 February 2017
AMNH: Opulent Oceans 3 October 2015–1 December 2016
Colonial Williamsburg: We are One: Mapping America’s Road from Revolution to Independence Opening 5 March 2016
Corning Museum of Glass: Revealing the Invisible: The History of Glass and the Microscope: April 23, 2016–March 18, 2017
SciArt in America: Traces of the Space Age and Memories of Tragedy in Robert Rauschenberg’s “Stoned Moon”
Science Museum: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius 10 February 2016–4 September 2016
gq-magazine: Leonardo da Vinci Will Make You Feel Terrible About Your Career
Queens’ College Cambridge: ‘The Rabbi & The English Scholar’ exhibition in the library 22 February–24 March 2016
Wellcome Collections: States of Mind 4 February–16 October 2016
CHF: The Art of Iatrochemistry
University of Oklahoma: Galileo’s World: National Weather Center: Exhibits
The English Garden: Visit the RHS Botanical Art Show

Watercolour on vellum by James Bolton. Bolton was born in West Yorkshire, England and was the son of a weaver. He was a self- taught botanist, artist and engraver. His brother Thomas Bolton (1722-1778) was also a naturalist. James Bolton was highly successful as a mycologist and author of several botanical books including the first British book on fungi. James and Thomas Bolton were both sponsored by the art and natural history collector Margaret Cavendish Bentinck, Duchess of Portland (1715-1785). Painting date c.1790s.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art: The Luxury of Time Runs until 27 March 2016
ZSL: London Zoo: Discover the fascinating wildlife of Nepal and Northern India
Royal College of Physicians: “Anatomy as Art” Facsimile Display Monday to Friday 9.30am to 5.30pm
JHI Blog: Dissenting Voices: Positive/Negative: HIV/AIDS In NYU’s Fales Library
St John’s College: University of Cambridge: Fred Hoyle: An Online Exhibition
Culture 24: Small but worldly maps exhibition makes sense of human wandering at London’s Store Street gallery
Manchester Art Gallery: The Imitation Game
The John Rylands Library: Magic, Witches & Devils in the Early Modern World 21 January–21 August 2016
Museum für Naturkunde Berlin: Dinosaurier in Berlin: Brachiosaurus as an Icon of Politics, Science, and Popular Culture 1 April 2015–31March 2018
Universty of Cambridge: Research: Newton, Darwin, Shakespeare – and a jar of ectoplasm: Cambridge University Library at 600
allAfrica: Algeria: Exhibition on Algeria (cartography) Marseille 20 January–2 May 2016
Osher Map Library: Masterpieces at USM: Celebrating Five Centuries of Rare Maps and Globes 19 November 2015–12 March 2016
Advances in the History of Psychology: Mar. 12th Pop-Up Museum Explores Contributions of Women of Colour in Psych
Historical Medical Library: Online Exhibition: Under the Influence of the Heavens: Astrology in Medicine in the 15th and 16th Centuries
Somerset House: Utopia 2016: A Year of Imagination and Possibility
New York Public Library: Printmaking Women: Three Centuries of Female Printmakers, 1570–1900 Runs till 27 May 2016
New-York Historical Society: Silicon City: Computer History Made in New York 13 November 2015–17 April 2016
Closing Very Soon: Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age
Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday
The Mary Rose: ‘Ringing the Changes’: Mary Rose Museum to re-open in 2016 with unrestricted views of the ship
Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys Season 20 November 2015–28 March 2016
Science Museum: Ada Lovelace Runs till 31 March 2016
Closing soon: British Library: 20th Century Maps 4 November 2016–1 March 2017
JHI Blog: Brave Entertainments
National Library of Scotland: Plague! A cultural history of contagious diseases in Scotland Runs till 29 May 2016
Science Museum: Churchill’s Scientists Runs till 1 March 2016
THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:
The Rose Theatre: The Alchemist by Ben Jonson 7–30 June 2016
Early Modern Medicine: Review: Mr Foote’s Other Leg
Restricted Data: The nuclear Secrecy Blog: Historical thoughts on Michael Frayn’s Copenhagen
Harvard Observatory History in Images: The Harvard Observatory Pinafore
![Actors: Peter Millman, Leon Campbell, [Ransom or Wheelwright], Henrietta Swope, Cecilia Payne, Mildred Shapley, Helen Sawyer, Sylvia Mussels, Adelaide Ames. Characters: William A. Rogers, Arthur Searle, [Pickering or Upton], computer, Josephina, computer, computer, computer, Rhoda Saunders](http://whewellsghost.files.wordpress.com/2016/03/pinaforeworking1000.png?w=640&h=409)
Actors: Peter Millman, Leon Campbell, [Ransom or Wheelwright], Henrietta Swope, Cecilia Payne, Mildred Shapley, Helen Sawyer, Sylvia Mussels, Adelaide Ames.
Characters: William A. Rogers, Arthur Searle, [Pickering or Upton], computer, Josephina, computer, computer, computer, Rhoda Saunders
Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016
The Regal Theatre: The Trials of Galileo International Tour March 2014–December 2017
Coming Soon: The Crescent Theatre: Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Swan Theatre: Doctor Faustus 7 March–4 August 2016
EVENTS:
British Society for the History of Pharmacy: Pharmacy History: sources and resources 18 April 2016
Wren Library Lincoln Cathedral: Lecture: Anna Agnarsdóttir – Sir Joseph Banks and Iceland 28 April 2016
Atlas Obscura: OBSCURA SOCIETY NY: AFTER-HOURS AT THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF MEDICINE “EAST MEETS WEST” 10 March 2016
Cambridge Bright Club: 10 March 2016 Featuring Seb Falk and his Astrolabe
The Royal Society: Workshop: The Politics of Academic Publishing 1950–2016 22 April 2016
The Center for the History of Medicine, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine: Lecture: The Unknown Story of Art and Artists in Louis Pasteur’s Personal and Professional Life 3 March 2016
Gresham College: Future Lectures (some #histSTM)
RCP: Dee late: rediscovering the lost world of John Dee 10 March
Warburg Institute: ‘Maps and Society’ Lectures: Mental Maps of the World in Great Britain and France, 1870–1914
University of Greenwich: Greenwich Maritime Centre Launch 8 March 2016
Royal College of Physicians: Dee late: inside Dee’s miraculous mind
CRASSH: Cambridge: Genius in History: A Public Conversation: 2 March 2016
University of Manchester: Master’s Study Information Day: Science communication; History of science, technology and medicine; Medical humanities 2 March 2016
Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine’s Center for the History of Medicine: Ill Composed: Sickness, Gender, and Belief in Early Modern England 8 March 2016
Hunterian Museum at the Royal College of Surgeons: People Powered Medicine: A one day public symposium 7 May 2016
Waterhouse Room Gordon Hall Harvard Medical School: The Unknown Story of Art and Artists in Louis Pasteur’s Personal and Professional Life 3 March 2016
University of York: Lecture: “Not Everyone Can Be Gandhi”: The Global Indian Medical Diaspora in the post WWII Era 3 March 2016
Bletchley Park: Alan Turing Through His Nephews Eyes 3 April 2016
Discover Medical London: “Dr Dee” & The Magic of Medicine A Special Half Day Tour 23 March & 27 May 2016
CHF: Brown Bag Lectures Spring 2016
NYAM: Credits, Thanks and Blame in the Works of Conrad Gessner
Discover Medical London: Walking Tour: Harley Street: Healers and Hoaxers
City Arts and Lectures: Steve Silberman: The Untold History of Autism 28 March 2016 Live on Public Radio
Schwetzingen: Astronomie-Tagung: Von Venus-Transit zum Schwarzen Loch 19 März 2016
PAINTING OF THE WEEK:
TELEVISION:
SLIDE SHOW:
Ordered Universe: Lessons for Interdisciplinary Working from Medieval Science
VIDEOS:
Youtube: MHS Oxford: Animate It – Diptych Dial
Youtube: Gauss and Germain – Professor Raymond Flood
WIMP: 1930: Rare Footage of Helen Keller Speaking With the Help of Anne Sullivan
RADIO & PODCASTS:
V&A Podcast: What was Europe? A New Salon
Ben Franklin’s World: Episode 070: Jennifer Morgan, How Historians Research
University of Cambridge: Sandars Lectures 2016: 3 Adam Winthrop: History of Resource Anthony Grafton
History of Alchemy: Abufalah, Soul Dust, and making a Basilisk
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
University of Oxford: Call for Registration: Oxford Scientiae 5–7 July 2016
AAAS: History and Philosophy of Science at AAAS call for symposia proposals for 2017 AAAS Meeting
La mort en Europe du XVIIe au XXIe siècle. Représentations, rites et usages: Appel à contribution
University of St Andrews: Mathematical Biography: A Celebration of MacTutor 16–17 September 2016
Amsterdam: Conference by Women in Philosophy #3 1 July 2016
University of Oklahoma: Midwest Junto for the History of Science: 1–3 April 2016
Notches: CfP: Histories of Music and Sexuality
University of Plymouth: CfP: One-Day Symposium: Pilgrimage, Shrines and Healing in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe 24 June 2016
University of Kent: CfP: Bridging the Divide: Literature and Science 3 June 2016
23 Things for Research: Book now for a Women in Wikipedia edit-a-thon, 23 March 2016
NYAM: Scientific Illustration: A Workshop Using the Collections of the Academy 7 April 2016
University of Kassel: CfP: Workshop: Representing Scientific Results 18–19 November 2016
Victoria University of Wellington: CfP: The New Zealand Polymath – Colenso and his contemporaries 17–19 November 2016
Rio de Janeiro: 25th International Congress for the History of Science and Technology: CfP: Global Mathematics 23–29 July 2017
Public Communication of Science and Technology: Conference program (Draft: PCST Conference Istanbul 26–28 April 2016
University of York: Research Masterclass: Death of the king: smallpox vaccination and diplomacy in Nepal in 1816 9 March 2016
AAR: Western Esotericism Group: CfP: AAR Annual Meeting San Antonio 19–22 November 2016
University of Warsaw: CfP: Interim Conference of ISA Research Committee on the History of Sociology 6–8 July 2016
Boston University: Conference: How Can HPS Contribute to Science Literacy and Policy? 26–27 February 2016
BSHS: Call for Papers and Panels: Science in Public 2016
University of Sussex: CfP: SPRU 50th anniversary conference on ‘Transforming Innovation’
NACBS, Washington DC: CfP: Early Modern History Workshop on “Networks of Knowledge” November 2016
UCL: STS: Workshop: Technology, Environment and Modern Britain 27 April 2016
Rutgers University: Workshop for the History of Environment, Agriculture, Technology, & Science (WHEATS) 30 October–2 October 2016
University of Cambridge: CRASSH: The Museum as Method: Collections, Research, Universities 14–15 March 2016
University of Zürich: Conrad Gessner Congress Program 6–9 June 2016
University of Kent: Society for the Social History of Medicine Conference Programme (DRAFT as at Feb 15, 2016) 7–10 July 2016
University of York: History of Medicine Masterclass – Smallpox Vaccination and Diplomacy in Nepal 9 March 2016
London Metropolitan University: CfP: ‘Made in London’: Makers, designers and innovators in musical instrument making in London, from the 18th to 21st centuries
Istanbul: XXXV Scientific Instrument Symposium: CfP: Instruments between East and West 26–30 September 2016
University of York: Conference: The Future of the History of the Human Sciences 7-8 April 2016
Harvard University: 51st Joint Atlantic Seminar for the History of Biology 2 April 2016
University of Cambridge: CfP Teaching and Learning in Early Modern England: Skills and Knowledge in Practice
American Historical Association: Perspectives on History: The 131st Annual Meeting Call for Proposals and Theme Denver CO 5–7 January 2017
Notches: CfP: Histories of Sexuality in Antiquity
Max Planck Institute for the History of Science: Call for Submissions: Book: Historical Epistemology of Science/Philosophy of Science, Torricelli
Notches: CfP: Histories of Sexuality in Latin America
University of Western Ontario: CfP: Philosophy of Logic, Mathematics, and Physics Graduate Conference
Institut d’Études Scientifiques de Cargèse, Corsica: CNRS School “BioPerspectives” Philosophy of Biology 29 March–1 April 2016
Klosterneuburg: CfP: European Advanced School in the Philosophy of the Life Sciences (EASPLS) 59 September 2016
Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine (CHSTM), University of Manchester: Lunchtime Seminar Series Feb–June 2016
AIP: Lyne Starling Trimble Science Heritage Public Lectures Feb–Sept 2016
H-Sci-Med-Tech: CfP: ICOHTEC Symposium in Rio de Janeiro on 23-29 July 2017
Asian Society for the History of Medicine: Call for Submissions: Taniguchi Medal 2016 Outstanding Graduate Student Essay
International Committee for the History of Technology: CfP: 43rd Annual Meeting in Porto, Portugal Technology, Innovation, and Sustainability: Historical and Contemporary Narratives 26–30 July 2016
Advances in the History of Psychology: The Future of the History of the Human Sciences
University of York 7–8 April 2016
UCL: London Ancient Science Conference: 15–18 February 2016
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow: CfP: Maculinity, health and medicine, c.1750–present 28–29 April 2016
Effaced Blog: CfP: History of Facial Hair
Sidney Sussex College: University of Cambridge: Programme and Registration Treasuries of Knowledge: 8 April 2016
LOOKING FOR WORK:
Queen Mary University of London: Applications Invited for AHRC CDP with British Library: Hans Sloane’s Books
Scientific Instrument Society: SIS grants
Univesity of Umeå: PhD student in History of Science and Ideas
Science Museum: Assistant Curator, Technologies and Engineering (maternity cover)
Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh: Library and Archive: Wellcome Trust Research Bursaries
University of Leeds: AHRC Funded PhD Studentship: “The Working Life of Evolutionary Biologists: Exploring the Culture of Scientific Research Through the Personal Archive of John Maynard Smith (1920-2004)”
AIP: Director of Niels Bohr Library
AHA Today: Cornell University History of Home Economics Fellowship
